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Quality of Life in Patients with Chronic Thyroid Eye Disease in the United States.
Cockerham, Kimberly P; Padnick-Silver, Lissa; Stuertz, Noel; Francis-Sedlak, Megan; Holt, Robert J.
Afiliação
  • Cockerham KP; Central Valley Eye Medical Group, 36 W Yokuts Avenue, Suite 2, Stockton, CA, 95207, USA.
  • Padnick-Silver L; Department of Ophthalmology, Stanford School of Medicine, 2454 Watson Court, Palo Alto, CA, 94303, USA.
  • Stuertz N; Horizon Therapeutics plc, 1 Horizon Way, Deerfield, IL, 60015, USA.
  • Francis-Sedlak M; Horizon Therapeutics plc, 1 Horizon Way, Deerfield, IL, 60015, USA.
  • Holt RJ; Horizon Therapeutics plc, 1 Horizon Way, Deerfield, IL, 60015, USA.
Ophthalmol Ther ; 10(4): 975-987, 2021 Dec.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34478126
Thyroid eye disease (TED) occurs when loss of immune tolerance results in orbital and retro-orbital inflammation. Fat and muscle tissue can swell severely, causing debilitating symptoms, including pain around/behind the eyes, eye movement abnormalities, bulging eyes (proptosis), and double vision (diplopia), manifesting in appearance and vision quality of life (QOL) changes. Some improvement can occur as inflammation quiets and TED becomes chronic/inactive. However, appearance and visual changes often remain due to persistent proptosis and eye muscle and eyelid changes. This study examined TED symptoms and QOL in 100 chronic TED patients. They answered questions about symptoms, how TED affected them, and their medical care. The average duration of TED was 6 years (3 years inactive), patients had an average of 20 TED-related doctor visits/year, and nearly one-half (42%) of patients reported having anxiety and/or depression. Prior TED treatments included steroids (25% when TED-related inflammation was present), orbital radiation (5%), and surgery (25%). Disease-specific QOL scores (average score: 60.5 of 100) indicated that these chronic patients reported similar QOL impact as those with moderate-to-severe, active disease. Compared with the least impacted group, the most impacted patients reported higher rates of hypothyroidism (18% vs. 0%), anxiety (48% vs. 17%), disability/unemployment (21% vs.3%), number of doctor visits (40 vs. 5 visits/person/year), pain (39% vs. 13%), blurry vision (30% vs. 17%), diplopia (27% vs. 3%), and surgical treatment for TED (45% vs. 10%). This study demonstrates that QOL continues to be severely impacted by TED long after TED-related inflammation has quieted.
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Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Tipo de estudo: Risk_factors_studies Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2021 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Tipo de estudo: Risk_factors_studies Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2021 Tipo de documento: Article